New study offers insights into addiction and impulse-driven behavior
December 9th, 2010 - 2:41 pm ICT by ANILondon, Dec 9 (ANI): Scientists have shed new light on dopamine’s role in the brain’s reward system.
The findings could provide insight into impulse control problems associated with addiction and a number of psychiatric disorders.
A joint study by the University of Michigan and University of Washington found that, contrary to the prevailing conception, differences in individuals’ styles of response to environmental cues can fundamentally influence chemical reward patterns in the brain.
Deeper understanding of these differences between individuals may lead to new preventive tools or treatments for compulsive behavior.
The researchers studied rats that had been selectively bred for certain behavioral traits, including different proclivities for addictive drugs. Rats in the drug-prone group tended to focus their attention on the lever. The other group cared a lot more about the place where the food actually appeared.
Still, if the rats’ brains saw the lever merely as a signal that accurately predicted the arrival of the food, the dopamine reward for both groups should be the same.
However, if the dopamine reward was tied to the strength of the rats’ desire for lever itself, one would expect a different pattern for each of the two groups.
U-M’s collaborators at the University of Washington used a technique called fast-scan cyclic voltammetry to measure the dopamine responses in the rats’ brains as they shifted over mere fractions of a second.
Their analysis showed that the drug-prone rats got a jolt of happiness just from the lever, while the food-oriented rats did not.
And their desire for the lever continued, even when the food reward was removed.
The findings were published online today in the journal Nature ahead of print publication. (ANI)
- The mere sight, smell of food hikes dopamine levels in binge eaters - Mar 01, 2011
- Certain genetic makeup reduces the brain's neurons in drug addicts - Mar 08, 2011
- Technique to visualize 'your brain on drugs' developed - Apr 27, 2010
- Why teens are more vulnerable to drug addiction, behavioral disorders - Jan 27, 2011
- Chemical system in brain that behaves differently in cocaine addicts identified - Aug 11, 2010
- Neural activity linked to food addiction identified - Apr 05, 2011
- Brain wiring makes women anorexic or obese - May 15, 2012
- Is sex addiction really a disease or just a convenient excuse? - Feb 25, 2011
- 'Drug from lizard saliva reduces food craving' - May 16, 2012
- Females become addicted to cocaine more easily - Mar 11, 2011
- 'Junk food' moms have 'junk food' babies - Mar 24, 2011
- 'Junk food' mums more likely to have 'junk food' babies - Mar 24, 2011
- Why anorexics don't like eating - May 22, 2011
- Genetic changes responsible for sweet tooth - Apr 05, 2011
- Mechanism behind addictions and some forms of obesity discovered - Oct 05, 2010
Tags: addiction, addictive drugs, behavioral traits, brains, collaborators, compulsive behavior, cues, deeper understanding, food reward, fractions, impulse control problems, jolt, journal nature, proclivities, psychiatric disorders, rats, reward system, university of michigan, university of washington, voltammetry